A curated list of resources, tools, and projects for the Polymer web component library.
Awesome Polymer is a curated collection of resources for the Polymer library, a JavaScript framework for building web components. It aggregates tutorials, tools, official elements, and community links to help developers learn and use Polymer effectively. The project solves the problem of scattered information by providing a single, organized reference for Polymer development.
Frontend developers and web engineers who are building applications with web components using the Polymer library. It's particularly useful for those seeking learning materials, tools, or reusable UI components.
Developers choose Awesome Polymer because it saves time by centralizing high-quality, vetted resources in one place. Its comprehensive coverage and community-driven updates ensure relevance and reliability compared to searching disparate sources.
A collection of awesome Polymer resources.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Centralizes everything from official documentation to tutorials and videos, as shown in the extensive lists under General resources, Tutorials, and Videos.
Follows the 'awesome list' philosophy for high-quality, community-vetted entries, ensuring reliability compared to scattered sources.
Includes build tools like Vulcanize and Polyserve, testing utilities like Web Component Tester, and editor snippets, detailed in the Tools and Testing sections.
Provides direct links to Polymer's element sets like Iron, Paper, and Gold, making it easy to find reusable UI components without hunting elsewhere.
Contains references to deprecated platforms like Google+ and tutorials from 2015-2017, indicating lack of recent updates and potential broken resources.
The list's value relies on external sites that may no longer be maintained, such as older Polymer versions or inactive community forums.
Focuses solely on Polymer, which has been superseded by LitElement and other modern libraries, reducing its relevance for current web development trends.